DragBikeMike
Serious Thumper
   
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SuzukiSavage.com Rocks!
Posts: 4470
Honolulu
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It didn’t take too long to search the internet and find examples of this type of detonation damage. Apparently, fuel and air accumulate in the crevice formed by the piston O.D., cylinder I.D., and the top ring. As the flame propagates across the combustion chamber the pressure and temperature rise to the point where the trapped fuel and air auto-ignite and explode. Most of the examples I found were confined to the intake side of the piston (just like mine). Most of the web articles attributed the problem to compression ratio. Start getting the squeeze up past 10:1 on an old-school engine (carbureted, no ignition retard, etc.) and pump gas becomes a problem.
I have no experience with the dreaded spark knock. The little I do know has been gleaned from books & magazines, YouTube vids, bull sessions, etc. I’ve always kept my ear to the ground, taking note of any unusual knocking, rattling, pinging, etc. This engine had none of that. At idle, it had the usual clatter, but under load there was no unusual noise. The spark plug always looked good; no metallic balls, no melted cement, no fractured insulator, no burned off ground electrode. It looked normal to me, certainly on the rich side.
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